The Vickers Viscount: The World's First Turboprop Airliner
By Nick Stroud
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The Vickers Viscount - Nick Stroud
Introduction
BORN WHEN MY late father, Mike Stroud, was putting together the first issue of British magazine Aircraft Illustrated as one of its founding Editors, I was brought into the world with the sound of aero-engines in my ears. Indeed, family folklore maintains that the ear-splitting appearance of four McDonnell Douglas Phantoms at Farnborough during my first air display, when I was six months old, wreaked permanent damage on those tender little lugholes. Spending as much time as my aviation journalist father and I did around aircraft in my pre-primary school years, it became a matter of some consideration between us in what type I would first take to the air. For me, it had to be the USAF’s Convair B-58 Hustler supersonic delta-winged Cold War bomber. As this looked unlikely in the UK in the early 1970s, we started thinking about alternatives, and I was delighted when, for my upcoming birthday, it had been arranged that the family would fly to Strasbourg in north-eastern France for a few days.
And so it was that on Thursday, February 27, 1974, my sixth birthday, we made our way to Heathrow to fly on British Midland Airways’ twice-weekly Viscount service to the picturesque town on the French-German border. It was to be my first flight and I was therefore allowed to take the window seat; and what windows they were! About the same size as me, these massive ovals offered an unsurpassed view, particularly if you were seated aft of the wing – which we were. My excitement knew no bounds as the Rolls-Royce Dart turboprops of BMA Viscount 813 G-AZNA spooled up into their characteristic high-pitched whine. Rumbling over the tarmac towards the runway, where we lined up on the piano keys
, was beyond thrilling. Watching the runway fall away below through the gigantic windows after a short gallop down the runway was spellbinding, as was being above the clouds for the first time. The view was breathtaking through this magical looking-glass: with nose firmly pressed against the window I could see forward to the wing and its resolute Darts driving us on towards the Continent; isolated clusters of top-lit white cumulo-nimbus rolled by below; a glance up revealed the steadily deepening blue stretching away forever, and to the rear was the tip of the Viscount’s distinctive upturned tailplane. I feel lucky to have had my first taste of flying aboard a type which made a virtue of emphasising the unique experience of air travel, especially in comparison to the uncomfortable sensory-deprivation-tank experience it often feels like today. The point of the Viscount was to enjoy the flight, not merely endure it.
So why the meander down memory lane? When Air World Editor Martin Mace approached me about the possibility of writing a book on a civil subject, he generously gave me a free hand when it came to choosing the subject. Without hesitation I said Viscount; it represents a Great British Success Story
, was produced in greater numbers than any other British medium-range airliner, and was operated by some 200 individual organisations in more than 80 countries over four decades – not bad for a type that was very nearly sidelined before a single airframe had been built. But more important than all these remarkable achievements for me was the fact that the Viscount had given me my first taste of flight back in 1974, and I’ve felt a strong kinship with it ever since. I’ve flown in numerous types since then, from Second World War bombers to military jets (although not a B-58 Hustler, sadly), but none hold as significant a place in my heart as the Viscount, still the most successful four-engined airliner in British aviation history.
Vickers Viscount 813 G-AZNA (c/n 350), seen here in its British Midland Airways (BMA) colour scheme, was originally built for South African Airways, and after making its maiden flight on December 7, 1958, was delivered on the 20th of that month. It joined BMA in March 1972, and was the aircraft in which the author, aged six, made his first flight in February 1974.
(The Aviation Historian Archive)
VICKERS VISCOUNT V.701 G-AMAV
This cutaway drawing by R.E. Poulton of the prototype Viscount 700-series, V.701 G-AMAV, was first published in the September 7, 1950, issue of Flight, just a few weeks after the aircraft had made its first flight. The detail drawing at top left shows the aileron’s flexible air-seal, which prevented air leaking from the underside to the topside of the wing. The middle-right detail drawing shows the double-slotted flaps at full deflection, and the system of operating them by means of a chain-and-sprocket link from a torque tube. The detail drawing at lower right shows the warm-air anti-icing airflow within the double skin on the wing’s leading edge. (© Flightglobal 2018)
CHAPTER 1 Genesis
THE ORIGIN OF what would ultimately be one of the greatest success stories of Britain’s post-war aircraft industry dates back to a resolutely optimistic appraisal undertaken by a committee convened in the dying days of 1942 to discuss what the nation’s post-war civil aircraft needs might be – a bold course of action at a time when the successful conclusion of the war against the Axis powers was far from certain.
Although Britain had been responsible for some of the most successful civil aircraft of the pre-war period, the outbreak of war in Europe in 1939 had forced the redeployment of the nation’s resources on to a war footing, the development of commercial aircraft having to be set aside in order to accommodate the mass production of warplanes for the impending conflict. This enormous acceleration in the production of fighters, bombers and other vital military types would, however, take some time to gather momentum, and in the interim Britain would be in desperate need of aircraft to bridge the gap. The nation’s air arms had secured a temporary respite during the crucial Battle of Britain — but only by the narrowest of margins. Hard times were ahead, and to keep Britain’s forces bolstered against those of Nazi Germany, the USA abandoned all pretence of impartiality, and in March 1941 enacted its Lend-Lease policy, in which food, oil and, importantly, military materiel would be supplied to nations facing the Axis war machine, most notably the UK. America was yet to become embroiled in the conflict and, in contrast to Britain, was still very much in the transport aircraft business; the USA would continue to develop civil types even after declaring war on Japan, Germany and Italy in December 1941. An important proviso of Lend-Lease, however, was that all materiel received was, on the cessation of hostilities, to be paid for in full, returned to the USA or destroyed. The thousands of transport aircraft received by the British as part of Lend-Lease, eminently convertible for commercial use, could not therefore be used as the backbone for the UK’s post-war airline industry.
Aware of this prospective handicap and showing remarkable prescience, the British government established a committee in the autumn of 1942 to devise a post-war civil aviation strategy. It was to be led by Lord Brabazon of Tara, the first person in Britain to be awarded a Royal Aero Club Aviator’s Certificate, in 1910, and formerly Minister of Transport during 1940–41 and Minister of Aircraft Production during 1941–42. Brabazon was tasked with organising an advisory committee to formulate plans for the procurement of suitable aircraft and the re-establishment of international air services, which, it was forecast, would continue operations over the pre-war routes to the furthest-flung reaches of the British Empire.
The first meeting of the Brabazon Committee was held on December 23, 1942, and was attended by Brabazon, three representatives from the Air Ministry and three from the Ministry of Aircraft Production, who over the next few months would shape the basic template of requirements that the post-war civil aircraft industry would have to meet. A second committee was established in the spring of 1943 to dig deeper into detail, the eight-man panel comprising individuals from industry, the relevant ministries and the British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC). Mention had already been made by the first committee of an economical [Douglas] DC-3 replacement for European services
, and after a number of iterations discussed by the Brabazon Committee and the new Ministry of Civil Aviation, established in November 1944, this eventually metamorphosed into requirement IIB, a sub-section of the second of five types outlined in the Brabazon Committee’s final report of 1945. Requirement II was for a medium-range 24-seat pressurised transport aircraft, the B suffix denoting that it was to be powered by four gas-turbine (turboprop) engines, a form of technology which at that time was untried and still very much in development, but which Vickers nevertheless felt showed a great deal of promise.
Having first flown in December 1935, the Douglas DC-3 became ubiquitous in service with airlines all over the world, particularly after the Second World War, when the type became readily available from surplus military stocks, and at affordable prices for fledgling airlines. One of the chief specifications set out by the wartime British Brabazon Committee was for a homegrown DC-3 replacement that could serve the nation’s post-war domestic and short-haul routes, and it was with this in mind that Vickers conceived what would eventually become the Viscount. (The Aviation Historian Archive)
Originally designed to a 1932 specification for a long-range twin-engined bomber, the Vickers Wellington first flew in June 1936 and provided sterling service for the RAF throughout the Second World War, despite being obsolete in comparison to its younger four-engined service-mates, the Avro Lancaster and Handley Page Halifax. The type was nevertheless a great success for Vickers, more than 11,460 examples being built. It was the only RAF bomber to be produced for the duration of the war, and was one of the few types to be in front-line service both when war broke out in